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Environmental and Safety Assessments of Industrial Production of Levulinic Acid via Acid-Catalyzed Dehydration
Author(s) -
Samir Meramo,
Karina A. Ojeda,
Eduardo Sánchez-Tuirán
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b02231
Subject(s) - levulinic acid , dehydration , catalysis , production (economics) , chemistry , industrial production , environmental science , organic chemistry , biochemistry , economics , macroeconomics , keynesian economics
These days, there is a need to develop novel and emerging processing pathways that permit production of value-added substances and fuels considering sustainability aspects. In this sense, levulinic acid (LA) is one of the most promising biorefinery products. This paper presents environmental and safety assessments of LA production via acid-catalyzed dehydration (ACD) of biomass. The process was modeled by using Aspen Plus process simulation software based on a capacity of 132 000 tons per annum of banana rachis (main raw material). Likewise, environmental and safety assessments were developed. Parameters such as heats of reaction, explosivity, toxicity of substances, and operational conditions along with extended mass and energy balances were used to perform safety and environmental analyses. In this regard, the modeled topology showed an inherent safety index (ISI) score of 24 with an equal contribution of 12 points for both chemical inherent safety index (CIS) and process inherent safety index (PIS). ACD showed a good safety performance, with moderate concerns related to the handling of formic acid. Moreover, the waste reduction algorithm (WAR) was used to assess environmental performance and estimate potential environmental impacts (PEIs) of the simulated topology. It was performed considering four case studies to determine the influence of mass streams (case 1), product streams (case 2), energy streams (case 3), and simultaneous products and energy contribution (case 4). This analysis showed that for this process, the total inletting flow of impacts that enter was less than the amount of these that leave the system according to a generation rate of the PEI for case 1 (-1.89 × 10 2 PEI/h) and case 3 (-1.83 × 10 2 PEI/h). From the environmental viewpoint, the major concern is associated with the photochemical oxidation potential category because of the handling of volatile organic compounds through the process.

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